Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models

Objective: This study investigates the feasibility of endobronchial ultrasound applicators for thermal ablation of lung tumors using acoustic and biothermal simulations. Methods: Endobronchial ultrasound applicators with planar (10 mm width) or tubular transducers (6 mm outer diameter (OD)) encapsul...

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Main Authors: Dong Liu, Matthew S. Adams, Chris J. Diederich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:International Journal of Hyperthermia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1683234
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spelling doaj-d7dbb246884145d5be05660dc54e89ea2020-11-25T02:44:00ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Hyperthermia0265-67361464-51572019-01-013611107112010.1080/02656736.2019.16832341683234Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung modelsDong Liu0Matthew S. Adams1Chris J. Diederich2University of California San FranciscoUniversity of California San FranciscoUniversity of California San FranciscoObjective: This study investigates the feasibility of endobronchial ultrasound applicators for thermal ablation of lung tumors using acoustic and biothermal simulations. Methods: Endobronchial ultrasound applicators with planar (10 mm width) or tubular transducers (6 mm outer diameter (OD)) encapsulated by expandable coupling balloons (10 mm OD) are considered for treating tumors from within major airways; smaller catheter-based applicators with tubular transducers (1.7–4 mm OD) and coupling balloons (2.5–5 mm OD) are considered within deep lung airways. Parametric studies were applied to evaluate transducer configurations, tumor size and location, effects of acoustic reflection and absorption at tumor-lung parenchyma interfaces, and the utility of lung flooding for enhancing accessibility. Patient-specific anatomical lung models, with various geometries and locations of tumors, were developed for further evaluation of device performance and treatment strategies. Temperature and thermal dose distributions were calculated and reported. Results: Large endobronchial applicators with planar or tubular transducers (3–7 MHz, 5 min) can thermally ablate tumors attached to major bronchi at up to 3 cm depth, where reflection and attenuation of normal lung localize tumor heating; with lung flooding, endobronchial applicators can ablate ∼2 cm diameter tumors with up to ∼2 cm separation from the bronchial wall, without significant heating of intervening tissue. Smaller catheter-based tubular applicators can ablate tumors up to 2–3 cm in diameter from deep lung airways (5–9 MHz, 5 min). Conclusion: Simulations demonstrate the feasibility of endobronchial ultrasound applicators to deliver thermal coagulation of 2–3 cm diameter tumors adjacent to or accessible from major and deep lung airways.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1683234thermal ablationhigh-intensity ultrasoundtherapeutic ultrasoundlung ablationpatient-specific simulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dong Liu
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
spellingShingle Dong Liu
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
International Journal of Hyperthermia
thermal ablation
high-intensity ultrasound
therapeutic ultrasound
lung ablation
patient-specific simulation
author_facet Dong Liu
Matthew S. Adams
Chris J. Diederich
author_sort Dong Liu
title Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
title_short Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
title_full Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
title_fullStr Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
title_full_unstemmed Endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
title_sort endobronchial high-intensity ultrasound for thermal therapy of pulmonary malignancies: simulations with patient-specific lung models
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Hyperthermia
issn 0265-6736
1464-5157
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Objective: This study investigates the feasibility of endobronchial ultrasound applicators for thermal ablation of lung tumors using acoustic and biothermal simulations. Methods: Endobronchial ultrasound applicators with planar (10 mm width) or tubular transducers (6 mm outer diameter (OD)) encapsulated by expandable coupling balloons (10 mm OD) are considered for treating tumors from within major airways; smaller catheter-based applicators with tubular transducers (1.7–4 mm OD) and coupling balloons (2.5–5 mm OD) are considered within deep lung airways. Parametric studies were applied to evaluate transducer configurations, tumor size and location, effects of acoustic reflection and absorption at tumor-lung parenchyma interfaces, and the utility of lung flooding for enhancing accessibility. Patient-specific anatomical lung models, with various geometries and locations of tumors, were developed for further evaluation of device performance and treatment strategies. Temperature and thermal dose distributions were calculated and reported. Results: Large endobronchial applicators with planar or tubular transducers (3–7 MHz, 5 min) can thermally ablate tumors attached to major bronchi at up to 3 cm depth, where reflection and attenuation of normal lung localize tumor heating; with lung flooding, endobronchial applicators can ablate ∼2 cm diameter tumors with up to ∼2 cm separation from the bronchial wall, without significant heating of intervening tissue. Smaller catheter-based tubular applicators can ablate tumors up to 2–3 cm in diameter from deep lung airways (5–9 MHz, 5 min). Conclusion: Simulations demonstrate the feasibility of endobronchial ultrasound applicators to deliver thermal coagulation of 2–3 cm diameter tumors adjacent to or accessible from major and deep lung airways.
topic thermal ablation
high-intensity ultrasound
therapeutic ultrasound
lung ablation
patient-specific simulation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1683234
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AT matthewsadams endobronchialhighintensityultrasoundforthermaltherapyofpulmonarymalignanciessimulationswithpatientspecificlungmodels
AT chrisjdiederich endobronchialhighintensityultrasoundforthermaltherapyofpulmonarymalignanciessimulationswithpatientspecificlungmodels
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